Large refrigerant capacity in rare earth free nanostructures of matrix embedded Fe nanoparticles
ORAL
Abstract
A magnetocaloric effect with sizable isothermal entropy change (△S) maintained over a broad range of temperature (10K ˂T˂ 300K) is reported for a rare earth free nanoparticle heterostructure. The nanostructure is composed of environment friendly and non-toxic iron (Fe) nanoparticles confined in layers of a titanium nitride (TiN) thin-film matrix. The magnetocaloric Fe particles of uniform shape and narrow size distribution are embedded in a TiN/Fe/TiN multilayered pattern using a pulsed laser deposition (PLD) method. Crystallographic studies carried out using x-ray diffraction have indicated the epitaxial nature of TiN film. M vs.T data at various fields, allows application of the Maxwell relation which provides quantitative information about the isothermal entropy change in the Fe nanoparticulate system. Our data show a magnetocaloric effect (MCE) with a |△Smax| of 4.18×103 J/K m3 in the magnetic field range of 0.1 T ˂ μ0H ˂ 3 T for the TiN/Fe/TiN sample having Fe particles size of ~15 nm. At lower applied fields (0.0025T ˂ μ0H ˂ 0.075T) the change in △S vs T peaks in the vicinity of the blocking temperature (TB∼60K). For T>TB, dynamic hysteresis is absent and the magnetocaloric effect becomes potentially useful for near room temperature cooling applications. The weak temperature dependence of △S over a wide range of temperature brings about a maximum refrigerant capacity value of 7.40×105 J/m3 (94 J/kg) at 3 T that is comparable with other attractive rare-earth-free nanostructured transition metal magnetocaloric materials.
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Presenters
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Kaushik Sarkar
North Carolina A&T State University
Authors
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Kaushik Sarkar
North Carolina A&T State University
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Surabhi m Shaji
North Carolina A&T State University
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Suchit Sarin
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
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Jeffrey Shield
University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Department of Mechanical and Materials Engineering & Nebraska Center for Materials and Nanoscience, University of Nebraska - Lincoln, Department of Mechanical and Materials Engineering, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
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Christian Binek
University of Nebraska - Lincoln
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Dhananjay Kumar
Department of Mechanical Engineering, North Carolina A & T State University, Greensboro, NC, North Carolina A&T state University, North Carolina A&T State University